21. The Everlasting First
Album: False Start (1970)
Writers: Arthur Lee and Jimi Hendrix
We have heard some examples of how the post-
Forever Changes version of Love often sounded like Arthur Lee's friend Jimi Hendrix. Here, we get Hendrix himself. The early 1970 edition of Love -- Lee, guitarist Gary Rowles, bassist Frank Fayad and drummer George Suranovich -- traveled to Europe to play some gigs, and while in London on March 17, 1970, met up with Hendrix to record three songs together. One is a long instrumental that was never named and has never been released. One is an early version of Hendrix' "Ezy Rider," which Lee revisited in his 1971 sessions that were finally released in 2009 (
that version made my Last 10 Out). And one is "The Everlasting First," written by Lee and Hendrix and sung by Lee, which ended up kicking off the next Love album,
False Start.
The song, which sounds like it was in mid-jam when the recording engineer flipped the switch, is immediately identifiable as a Hendrix work, as it opens with a solo featuring his distinctive sound before evolving into a proper intro.
The lyrics are all over the place and I wouldn't be surprised if they were just taken from fragments in Lee's notebook. But this part is eye-opening:
So you killed Jesus
You killed Abraham too
You killed Martin
What you here to do
Now we're gonna play you the feelings
That they all left behind
And those feelings are expressed by Hendrix in a wailing solo and by Lee by screaming "Why you make it hurt so bad/Take everything I had/Everything I had/Everything I HAAAAAD". The last 40 seconds or so are more glorious Hendrix vamping, which ends abruptly (presumably a subsequent jam was edited out), with no space between its end and the beginning of
False Start's second track "Flying," which also made my Last 10 Out.
This is not a song whose construction was planned out and refined, which is why it is not higher on my list, but it shows off how gifted a guitarist Hendrix was and how well he would have been able to work with Lee had they tried to collaborate further. Hendrix envisioned a supergroup with himself, Lee and Steve Winwood called Band-Aid, but died before he could make it happen. Lee ended up using that name for the backing band for his first solo album, 1972's
Vindicator.
According to Lee in the documentary
Love Story, he met Hendrix in 1964 when Lee's song "My Diary" was recorded by Rosa Lee Brooks and Hendrix, who had just been fired from Little Richard's band for showboating (you DON'T upstage Little Richard), was recruited by the label when Lee said he wanted the guitar part to sound like Curtis Mayfield. "It was the first time he ever recorded in the studio, and it was one of my songs," Lee said. "He's about the best guitar player I've ever seen."
There are a few documented live performances of "The Everlasting First" between 1974 and 1994, the last shortly before my first Lee/Love show (I know it wasn't played that night).
Alternate version which appears on
West Coast Seattle Boy: The Jimi Hendrix Anthology:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQSWx_-jBdY
Another alternate version that appears on
The Blue Thumb Acetate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QZRVzS3IeG8
Live version from 1994 in Northampton, MA, less than 2 weeks before I saw them (appears on
Coming Through to You: The Live Recordings (1970-2004)):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7eFcCt7JFA0
At #20, another album opener that has a jarring contrast in its opening minute.